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LOS ANGELES (AP) - A tentative contract
between screenwriters and producers is easing fears across Hollywood
about a summer of strikes that could devastate the entertainment
industry. The three-year contract still must be ratified
in early June by a majority of the Writers Guild of America's
11,500 members, but approval is expected. Next up is
the Screen Actors Guild contract, which expires June 30. Last
year, a record-length strike by commercial actors crippled the
advertising industry, prompting fears of walkouts by writers and
feature actors this year. But with a contract agreement
reached between the Writers Guild of America and the Alliance
of Motion Picture & Television Producers three days after
the expiration date and without a strike, those fears are subsiding.